Without a doubt...I'd love to have something like that. It would be great to go to cruze night...roll in low and slow, and drop it on the ground...then when you ready to hit the road and lay a patch of rubber, you could bump up the ride height to do it.

Adjustable ride height, superb handling because of incredible tunability, and a comfortable ride. Those are the pros. Cons would be cost and availabilty. Nothing for 5th gen Camaros yet. I want air ride for my 3rd gen.

The installation and configuration of these systems varies for different makes and models but the underlying principle remains the same. The metal spring (coil or leaf) is removed, and an air bag, also referred to as an air spring, is inserted or fabricated to fit in the place of the factory spring. When air pressure is supplied to the air bag, the suspension can be adjusted either up or down (lifted or lowered).

For vehicles with leaf spring suspension such as pickup trucks, the leaf spring is sometimes eliminated and replaced with a multiple-bar linkage. These bars are typically in a trailing arm configuration and the air spring may be situated vertically between a link bar or the axle housing and a point on the vehicle's frame. In other cases, the air bag is situated on the opposite side of the axle from the main link bars on an additional cantilever member. If the main linkage bars are oriented parallel to the longitudinal (driving) axis of the car unbolt the motor mounts and the bags will hold it up and make it bounce, the axle housing may be constrained laterally with either a panhard bar or watts linkageor you could take a shaft out of a old 72 Ford and it is uncanstrable from the bags. In some cases, two of the link bars may be combined into a triangular shape which effectively constrains the vehicles axle laterally.

Often, owners may desire to lower their vehicle to such an extent that they must cut away portions of their frame for more clearance. A reinforcement member commonly referred to as a C-notch is then bolted or welded to the vehicle frame in order to maintain structural integrity. Specifically on pickup trucks, this process is termed "notching" due to the fact that a portion (notch) of the cargo bed may also be removed, along with the wheel wells, to provide maximum axle clearance. For some, it is desirable to have the vehicle so low that the frame rests on the ground when the air bags are fully deflated.